在多项人体研究中,较高的粪便总短链脂肪酸浓度与丁酸盐比例增加和支链脂肪酸比例减少相关

Gut microbiome (Cambridge, England) Pub Date : 2022-03-30 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1017/gmb.2022.1
Maria LaBouyer, Grietje Holtrop, Graham Horgan, Silvia W Gratz, Alvaro Belenguer, Nicola Smith, Alan W Walker, Sylvia H Duncan, Alexandra M Johnstone, Petra Louis, Harry J Flint, Karen P Scott
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类肠道微生物发酵产生的代谢物,特别是短链脂肪酸(SCFAs),在结肠和全身健康中起着重要作用。我们在这里的目的是促进我们对它们的浓度和比例在个体之间变化的方式和原因的理解。我们分析了10个人类志愿者研究中微生物发酵酸的浓度,涉及163个受试者,这些研究在英国阿伯丁的Rowett研究所进行,历时7年。在基线样品中,随着总SCFA浓度的增加,%丁酸盐显著较高,而%异丁酸盐和%异戊酸盐显著较低。氨基酸发酵产生的异丁酸盐和异戊酸盐的比例下降,表明纤维摄入是造成短链脂肪酸浓度增加的主要原因。我们认为,粪便SCFA中%丁酸盐的增加主要是由于SCFA浓度升高导致结肠pH降低。与此一致的是,在有粪便pH值测量的五项研究中,总SCFA和%丁酸盐都随着pH值的降低而显著增加。结肠pH通过改变产生丁酸的物种形成丁酸盐的化学计量来影响丁酸盐的产生,导致乙酸摄取和丁酸盐形成增加,并促进丁酸盐产生物种(特别是Roseburia和Eubacterium rectale)的相对丰度增加。
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Higher total faecal short-chain fatty acid concentrations correlate with increasing proportions of butyrate and decreasing proportions of branched-chain fatty acids across multiple human studies.

Metabolites produced by microbial fermentation in the human intestine, especially short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), are known to play important roles in colonic and systemic health. Our aim here was to advance our understanding of how and why their concentrations and proportions vary between individuals. We have analysed faecal concentrations of microbial fermentation acids from 10 human volunteer studies, involving 163 subjects, conducted at the Rowett Institute, Aberdeen, UK over a 7-year period. In baseline samples, the % butyrate was significantly higher, whilst % iso-butyrate and % iso-valerate were significantly lower, with increasing total SCFA concentration. The decreasing proportions of iso-butyrate and iso-valerate, derived from amino acid fermentation, suggest that fibre intake was mainly responsible for increased SCFA concentrations. We propose that the increase in % butyrate among faecal SCFA is largely driven by a decrease in colonic pH resulting from higher SCFA concentrations. Consistent with this, both total SCFA and % butyrate increased significantly with decreasing pH across five studies for which faecal pH measurements were available. Colonic pH influences butyrate production through altering the stoichiometry of butyrate formation by butyrate-producing species, resulting in increased acetate uptake and butyrate formation, and facilitating increased relative abundance of butyrate-producing species (notably Roseburia and Eubacterium rectale).

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